OREM — The last thing he did before going to work that night was cuddle his 1-year-old son to sleep.

"It was the same thing he did every night," Kaylyn Shinners said at her husband's funeral on Saturday. Provo police officer Joseph Shinners was shot and killed while apprehending an armed fugitive during his usual overnight shift on Jan. 5.

It "was the day we all dreaded would come," Provo Police Chief Richard Ferguson said. Joseph Shinners, he said, put himself between a wanted and known dangerous fugitive and another officer when he saw there was a threat.

Law enforcement officers arrive at the UCCU Center in Orem prior to the arrival of the hearse carrying the casket of slain Provo police officer Joseph Shinners on Saturday, Jan. 12, 2019. (Photo: Steve Griffin, KSL)

"He selflessly sacrificed his life to protect the lives of his fellow officers," Ferguson said. "He was lost at the hands of evil."

Hundreds of uniformed officers, including many from outside of Utah, attended the funeral held at the Utah Community Credit Union Center at Utah Valley University to honor the life of 29-year-old Shinners, a three-year veteran at the Provo Police Department.

"He was the very best kind of police officer," Ferguson said, adding that Shinners was "a high-speed and low-drag kind of cop."

"He was always happy, energetic and excited about being a Provo police officer," the chief said. "He loved life."

Ferguson promised Kaylyn Shinners that her husband "will not be forgotten and justice will be pursued for his death."

The flag-draped casket of Provo police officer Joseph Shinners is carried out of the UCCU Center in Orem for his funeral on Saturday, Jan. 12, 2019. (Photo: Steve Griffin, KSL)

The man in custody in connection with the shooting, Matt Frank Hoover, 40, has a lengthy criminal history and may face aggravated murder charges. According to police reports, the two each fired a shot, with Hoover being hospitalized with minor injuries.

"Joe fought as a warrior on the outside, but had a caring heart of gold on the inside," said his older brother, officer Michael Shinners, a member of the police force in Haverhill, Massachusetts. "Joe is the first man you want next to you when things go bad."

He said "Joe knew what he was doing that night … apprehending the bad guys and getting them off the street."

The two met in junior high, but began dating in high school and were married after Joseph Shinners completed his mission in El Salvador for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She said he was anxious about having children, but quickly became a wonderful father to their son, Logan.

Master officer Joseph Shinners of the Provo Police Department was killed in the line of duty on Jan. 5. Watch the livestream of his funeral here.

He said it has been a difficult week for the agency, but the tragedy of losing one of their own has strengthened them.

"They're carrying each other's water right now," Ferguson said.

Tears streamed down the faces of many of those officers at the graveside service that followed the funeral. Shinners was buried at Evergreen Cemetery in Springville, near where he lived with his wife and son.

A procession of law enforcement vehicles preceded Shinners' casket, winding from flag-lined streets in Orem, to Center Street in Provo, where the trees were tied with blue ribbons, and on to Springville, where more American flags lined the way to the cemetery.

Policing, Ferguson said, has always been dangerous, because of the "evil" that exists in communities.

"Police officers, just like the military, understand there are only two rules," he said. "One rule is that good men and women are going to die protecting the peace and civil liberties of everyone. And rule No.2 is that you can't change No.1."

He said police work "is not a job, it is truly a calling," one that Shinners did well.

The police chief said he will remember Shinners as "one of the very best police officers I've ever had the opportunity to associate with.

"He's a leader and he's a hero. And he has the ability that a lot of people don't have and that is to be humble while confident," he said.